I'm currently working on a VBA code generator/injector that adds VBA functionality to Excel workbooks by using the VBA Extensibility. This all works fine.
However, the original code that is injected uses conditional compilation, referring to some global conditional compilation arguments:
Is there any way I can programmatically modify/add the conditional compilation arguments of a VBA project?
I checked all properties of the VBProject but couldn't find anything.
Inspired by this approach, shown by SiddharthRout, I managed to find the following solution using SendMessage
and FindWindow
:
Option Explicit
Private Declare Function FindWindow Lib "user32" Alias "FindWindowA" _
(ByVal lpClassName As String, ByVal lpWindowName As String) As Long
Private Declare Function FindWindowEx Lib "user32" Alias "FindWindowExA" _
(ByVal hWnd1 As Long, ByVal hWnd2 As Long, ByVal lpsz1 As String, _
ByVal lpsz2 As String) As Long
Private Declare Function GetWindowText Lib "user32" Alias "GetWindowTextA" _
(ByVal hwnd As Long, ByVal lpString As String, ByVal cch As Long) As Long
Private Declare Function GetWindowTextLength Lib "user32" Alias _
"GetWindowTextLengthA" (ByVal hwnd As Long) As Long
Private Declare Function SendMessage Lib "user32" Alias "SendMessageA" _
(ByVal hwnd As Long, ByVal wMsg As Long, ByVal wParam As Long, lParam As Any) As Long
Const WM_SETTEXT = &HC
Const BM_CLICK = &HF5
Public Sub subSetconditionalCompilationArguments()
Dim strArgument As String
Dim xlApp As Object
Dim wbTarget As Object
Dim lngHWnd As Long, lngHDialog As Long
Dim lngHEdit As Long, lngHButton As Long
strArgument = "PACKAGE_1 = 1"
Set xlApp = CreateObject("Excel.Application")
xlApp.Visible = False
Set wbTarget = xlApp.Workbooks.Open("C:\Temp\Sample.xlsb")
'Launch the VBA Project Properties Dialog
xlApp.VBE.CommandBars(1).FindControl(ID:=2578, recursive:=True).Execute
'Get the handle of the "VBAProject" Window
lngHWnd = FindWindow("#32770", vbNullString)
If lngHWnd = 0 Then
MsgBox "VBAProject Property Window not found!"
GoTo Finalize
End If
'Get the handle of the dialog
lngHDialog = FindWindowEx(lngHWnd, ByVal 0&, "#32770", vbNullString)
If lngHDialog = 0 Then
MsgBox "VBAProject Property Window could not be accessed!"
GoTo Finalize
End If
'Get the handle of the 5th edit box
lngHEdit = fctLngGetHandle("Edit", lngHDialog, 5)
If lngHEdit = 0 Then
MsgBox "Conditional Compilation Arguments box could not be accessed!"
GoTo Finalize
End If
'Enter new argument
SendMessage lngHEdit, WM_SETTEXT, False, ByVal strArgument
DoEvents
'Get the handle of the second button box (=OK button)
lngHButton = fctLngGetHandle("Button", lngHWnd)
If lngHButton = 0 Then
MsgBox "Could not find OK button!"
GoTo Finalize
End If
'Click the OK Button
SendMessage lngHButton, BM_CLICK, 0, vbNullString
Finalize:
xlApp.Visible = True
'Potentially save the file and close the app here
End Sub
Private Function fctLngGetHandle(strClass As String, lngHParent As Long, _
Optional Nth As Integer = 1) As Long
Dim lngHandle As Long
Dim i As Integer
lngHandle = FindWindowEx(lngHParent, ByVal 0&, strClass, vbNullString)
If Nth = 1 Then GoTo Finalize
For i = 2 To Nth
lngHandle = FindWindowEx(lngHParent, lngHandle, strClass, vbNullString)
Next
Finalize:
fctLngGetHandle = lngHandle
End Function
The only way to affect anything in that dialog box is through SendMessage
API functions, or maybe Application.SendKeys
. You'd be better off declaring the constants in code, like this:
#Const PACKAGE_1 = 0
And then have your code modify the CodeModule
of all your VBA components:
Dim comp As VBComponent
For Each comp In ThisWorkbook.VBProject.VBComponents
With comp.CodeModule
Dim i As Long
For i = 1 To .CountOfLines
If Left$(.Lines(i, 1), 18) = "#Const PACKAGE_1 =" Then
.ReplaceLine i, "#Const PACKAGE_1 = 1"
End If
Next i
End With
Next comp
For Access 2000 I used:
Application.GetOption("Conditional Compilation Arguments")
for getting,
Application.SetOption("Conditional Compilation Arguments", "<arguments>")
for setting.
That's all.
This is how to get and set multiple arguments in Access after 2010:
To set them this is the code:
application.SetOption "Conditional Compilation Arguments","A=4:B=10"
To get them:
Application.GetOption("Conditional Compilation Arguments")
They are printed like this:
A = 4 : B = 10
That is how to test it:
Sub TestMe()
#If A = 1 Then
Debug.Print "a is 1"
#Else
Debug.Print "a is not 1"
#End If
End Sub
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19726791/how-to-programmatically-change-conditional-compilation-properties-of-a-vba-proje